Council Rock South got off to a fast start Thursday night and never really slowed down.
Jeremy Rayher scored twice in the first period and the Golden Hawks went on to a 7-2 win over Spring-Ford Thursday night at Hatfield Ice Arena. Top-seeded South (22-2) will try to win its fourth Flyers Cup next Wednesday night when it faces North Penn (8:45 at Hatfield Ice).
Spring-Ford, the 12th and last seed in the tournament, closed its season at 12-10-1 after winning two games to reach the semifinal round.
Rayher got his team on the scoreboard with 3:23 left in the opening and added a second goal with 57 second left. Those goals, his third and fourth of the tournament, set tone for the evening.
Rayher, a senior, spoke to the importance of the fast start.
“We all knew what my sophomore year with Pennsbury,” he said (the Hawks lost to the Falcons in the Flyers Cup semifinals).
“I just want that ring, everyone on the team wants that ring, so we all just came out hard, we came out with a mindset to win this game.
“We all just took it to them. We hit hard, we got a lot of shots on net. The goalie gave up lots of rebounds and we capitalized on them.”
Koen Gregg scored for the Rams 3:25 into the middle period to make it a 2-1 game but Daniel Filippov answered of South at the 6:34 mark.
The Hawks broke the game open when Jonah Weston, Rayher, and Jackson Mosley all scored goals in a span of 2 minutes, 39 seconds early in the third period. The balance of the period saw Spring-Ford’s Nathan Riley and the Hawks’ Peter Pereborow trade goals.
“We got a little rocky in the second period,” said South coach Joe Houk. “We let them get a real crappy goal, but o thought all in all our puck pursuit was there.
“Maybe a little too much individual play. We got away from our game plan a little bit there.”
But Houk was able to get his troops refocused during the break for the post-second period ice cut.
“I thought we outplayed them from start to finish,” hGoukouk Houk said. “We really didn’t give them much room to breathe.”
Spring-Ford coach Tom Kisela reflected on his first season behind the Rams’ bench.
“For me, this whole season begins and ends with the players,” he said. As a first-year head coach, sometimes ir can take time to establish a culture, but not with these guys. Right from the start, I knew these wanted someone to come in and push them to get better every day.
“For us, having the incredibly successful season we had is a combination of diversity and the lessons learned throughout the year.”
Spring-Ford 0 1 1—2
C.R. South 2 1 4—7